The carbocations (2) and (3) only differ in the positions of electrons, so they are resonance forms of the same ion, and can be described as a non-classical carbocation. NMR evidence for the non-classical nature of such cations is given in March (6th ed.), pp. 1582–1583.
Wagner-Meerwein shift
Camphene hydrochloride–isobornyl chloride rearrangment
In the presence of a Lewis acid catalyst, camphene hydrochloride (1) rearranges to isobornyl chloride (2).
The mechanism is believed to involve the following steps:
- the Lewis acid catalyst abstracts chloride from camphene hydrochloride (1), leaving behind a tertiary carbocation (2)
- the tertiary carbocation (2) rearranges to a secondary carbocation (3) by a [1,2]-alkyl shift
- a chloride ion adds to the secondary carbocation (3), forming isoborny chloride (4)